Category Archives: Society

The Latest news about what is effecting Society in North America, These PR articles, bring the newest technologies, initiatives and helpful tools to those who need them.

Northeast Delta HSA announces free-to-public 2023 Faith Summit set for May 20; event will equip spiritual leaders and professionals with mental health and addiction tools


Northeast Delta HSA announces free-to-public 2023 Faith Summit set for May 20

Northeast Delta HSA announces free-to-public 2023 Faith Summit set for May 20

“I believe that as a government agency, we can and are effectively helping our citizens meet many of their physical, behavioral health, financial, and social needs,” Dr. Sizer said.

Northeast Delta Human Services Authority (NEDHSA) announces its 2023 Faith Summit set for Saturday, May 20, 2023, at the University of Louisiana Monroe’s Bayou Pointe Event Center, with registration beginning at 8 a.m. The theme for the Faith Summit is “Using Faith to Reduce Fear: My New Future.” This event is part of NEDHSA’s Faith Partnership Initiatives to help spiritual leaders better understand the complexities and treatment options for those battling mental illness and addictions.

NEDHSA Executive Director Dr. Monteic A. Sizer said he “conceptualized our faith partnership initiative ten years ago to help faith leaders better understand the science, complexities, and treatment options available for those battling mental illness and addiction in their pulpits, congregations, homes, and communities.”

“I believe that as a government agency, we can and are effectively helping our citizens meet many of their physical, behavioral health, financial, and social needs,” Dr. Sizer said. “However, the government can’t solve complex societal problems alone.”

The Faith Summit will feature Dr. Sizer as the keynote speaker, four breakout sessions, a panel of faith-based leaders, and Peer Counselor Tonja Myles, a subject matter expert in mental health, substance abuse, and untreated trauma. In addition, the faith summit will provide opportunities for faith and spiritual influencers from various sectors and denominations to network and uncover solutions and resources to aid their parishioners who may be experiencing mental health and addiction disorders.

NEDHSA created partnerships with faith leaders and their congregations because they are uniquely positioned in society to help further NEDHSA’s efforts to stabilize traditional mental health services. Additionally, NEDHSA wants to educate, equip and provide resources to faith leaders to address substance abuse, prevention, support, and recovery needs in their congregations. The Faith Summit will also provide Continuing Education Units (CEUs) to industry professionals.

Dr. Sizer said, “various negative health outcomes are attributable to the interactions of traumatic experiences and social and political determinants of health.”

“The science is clear,” Dr. Sizer said. “What is unclear is whether human beings can do something about what is known consistently and long enough without God’s intervention. Just look at our nation and world.”

No-cost tickets are available via the following link: nedhsafaith2023.eventbrite.com

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Even When You Feel Small And Unimportant, God Is Mighty and Powerful


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I believe men and women, single or married would be interested in my book. It gives personal experiences of how God changed my life completely, even when I had low self-esteem and felt I was not good enough for God to use me

Author Barbara Bean testifies to the mighty work of God in her life in I’m Not Supposed To Be Here But God ($12.49, paperback, 9781662874284; $5.99, e-book, 9781662874291).

Through God’s blessing in the ministry of help, Evangelist Bean feels deep compassion for the lost and hurting in the Body of Christ and wants to serve the community as the Lord leads and empowers.

“I believe men and women, single or married would be interested in my book. It gives personal experiences of how God changed my life completely, even when I had low self-esteem and felt I was not good enough for God to use me,” said Bean.

Evangelist Barbara Bean was called to the ministry in April 1969 and has ministered on skid row, boy’s camps, women’s prison, convalescent homes, television, radio, ministering in the Virgin Islands, Freeport Haiti, as well as locally. She is the founder and CEO of Outreach/Breakthrough Ministries, established in 1975. Bean graduated from Sure Foundation Theological Institute with a Bachelor of Theology Degree, a Master’s Degree in Theology, and an Ecclesiastical Doctorate Degree in Bible Philosophy in Theology. She and her husband, Elder Leslie Bean, share five adult children.

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Xulon Press, a division of Salem Media Group, is the world’s largest Christian self-publisher, with more than 15,000 titles published to date. I’m Not Supposed to Be Here But God is available online through xulonpress.com/bookstore, amazon.com, and barnesandnoble.com.

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Inspired by Tragedy, Military Vet Donates Glasses for Color Blindness to Rio Rancho Schoolchildren Who Are Color Vision Deficient


“One of my colleagues injured in the blast had a son who was deaf and received cochlear implants, which completely changed his life. This inspired me to help others, so every year I buy EnChroma glasses to help color blind students in the Rio Rancho Public School District.” – Ron Neldon

– Generous Donation Helps Color Blind Students Overcome Learning Challenges in School –

Rio Rancho, NM & Berkeley, CA – April 24, 2023 – EnChroma, Inc. – makers of glasses for color blindness – and Rio Rancho Public Schools, today announced that a generous local military veteran has purchased EnChroma glasses for color blind students to overcome the obstacles color blindness poses to learning. The EnChroma glasses will help the color blind students better understand color-coded information on tests, projects, or assignments for which correctly interpreting color plays a role.

One in 12 boys (8%) and one in 200 girls (.5%) are red-green color blind; an estimated 13 million in the US and 350 million worldwide. With nearly 17,000 students in the district, over 700 Rio Rancho students are likely color blind.

While people with normal color vision see over one million hues and shades, the color blind only see an estimated 10% of them. As a result, colors can appear dull, indistinct, and difficult to discern. This can make understanding colored information in graphs, charts, presentations, maps, and material written in certain colors problematic. Click here to see how schoolwork containing colors appear to red-green color blind students.

The donor of the glasses, Ron Neldon, is motivated by both tragedy and a unique inspiration. On June 25, 1996, terrorists backed by Iran detonated a truck bomb outside of the Khobar Towers housing complex in Saudi Arabia, where Ron was stationed with the Air Force. The blast killed 19 US service members and injured hundreds. On behalf of the victims, the US government successfully sued Iran for its role. With some of the money he received from the settlement, Ron has sought ways to help others.

“One of my colleagues injured in the blast eventually had a son who was born deaf and received cochlear implants so he could hear, which completely changed his life,” said Neldon. “I started watching videos of people hearing for the first time and eventually became fascinated by people seeing color for the first time with EnChroma glasses. They inspired me to make a positive impact on young people’s lives, so every year I buy EnChroma glasses to help color blind students in the Rio Rancho Public School District.” To read more about Neldon’s experience and motivation to help others, or to download his photo, click here.

Engineered with special optical filters, EnChroma glasses help those with red-green color blindness see an expanded range of colors more vibrantly, clearly, and distinctly.

“Only 11 of 50 states currently test schoolchildren for color blindness, so many kids go undiagnosed through much of their education unaware of their condition or its effects,” said Erik Ritchie, CEO of EnChroma. “We applaud the generosity of Mr. Neldon, thank him for his service, and encourage other school districts to test for color vision deficiency and get EnChroma glasses to support color blind students.”

EnChroma Color Accessibility Program™

EnChroma is the lead advocate for “color accessibility” through its EnChroma Color Accessibility Program™. Via the program, EnChroma donates a pair of glasses for each pair purchased by public venues. In New Mexico, EnChroma glasses have been offered since 2019 to color-blind visitors to the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe to enable them to experience the colors in O’Keeffe’s iconic works.

Over 200 organizations participate in the program including schools, universities, parks, libraries, museums, and others to loan the glasses to color-blind students and guests. In addition to its free color blindness test, EnChroma offers materials for schools to share with teachers, parents, and students to educate them about color blindness and how to support color-blind students. The program is also open to employers.

EnChroma encourages parents and educators to have students take EnChroma’s free online color blindness test at enchroma.com, which takes less than two minutes. A study by the University of California, Davis, and France’s INSERM Stem Cell and Brain Research Institute, demonstrated the effectiveness of EnChroma glasses.

Media: Product shots, b-roll, videos, and images can be downloaded here. EnChroma’s CEO, and Rio Ranch Public Schools officials, are available for interviews.

About Rio Rancho Public Schools

Rio Rancho Public Schools is a school district based in Rio Rancho, New Mexico, serving the municipality of Rio Rancho. The school district has a total of 20 schools and nearly 17,000 students. The district has two high schools, two alternative high schools, four middle schools, 11 elementary schools, and one preschool.

Visit http://www.rrps.net or call 505.896.0667 for more information.

About EnChroma

Based in Berkeley, Calif., EnChroma produces leading-edge eyewear for color blindness and low vision, and other solutions for color vision, sold online and through Authorized Retailers worldwide. Invented in 2010, EnChroma’s patented eyewear combines the latest in color perception, neuroscience, and lens innovation to improve the lives of people with color vision deficiency around the world. EnChroma received an SBIR grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). It earned the 2016 Tibbetts Award from the U.S. Small Business Administration in recognition of the firm’s innovative impact on the human experience through technology, and the 2020 Innovation Award in Life Sciences from the Bay Area’s East Bay Economic Development Alliance.

For more information call 510-497-0048 or visit http://www.enchroma.com/enchroma.com.

Media Contacts:

Rio Rancho Public Schools

Wyndham Kemsley

Communications Director

Phone: 505.614.6872

wyndham.kemsley@rrps.net

EnChroma

Kent Streeb

Vice President of Communications and Partnerships

P: 530.908.9225

kent@enchroma.com

A Spiritual Guide Seeking to Make the Bible Easy to Understand for Those Needing Comfort


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Inspired by an online survey that reported “Fewer teenagers and young adults read or show interest in the Bible in today’s time,” author NeNe Nelson wanted to help change that. Her new book, “The Bible Is Broken…Down” is a spiritual guide that is written in a way that makes the Bible fun and less daunting.

The book reads like a “CliffsNotes” version of the King James Bible. It guides the reader through the Bible, verse after verse, keeping intact its original manuscript, content, and contexts as it veers away from the idea that one should read the Bible cover to cover. In bits and pieces, it offers the reader the gist of the whole Bible.

“Reading the Bible can be a difficult and daunting task,” Nelson said. “Hopefully this innovative approach will help those who find the Bible difficult, get through it with pleasure and ease.

Nelson also believes that one of the things that can make one give up on reading the bible is the pronunciation of hundreds of difficult names, and some names are repeated over and over, but they are different people—making it difficult to know who is who.

Therefore there is a dedicated chapter in the book to make learning the many names in the Bible entertaining and engaging.

“Hopefully the reader’s curious nature will entice them to examine the Bible and find out on their own what the Bible truly says,” Nelson said.

“The Bible Is Broken…Down”

By NeNe Nelson

ISBN: 9781665719742 (softcover); 9781665719766 (hardcover); 9781665719759 (electronic)

Available at Archway Publishing, Amazon and Barnes & Noble

About the author

NeNe Nelson grew up in a city in the Southern region of the United States where a large percentage of the people in that region practiced only one faith—the Christian faith. However, as a child she found it confusing that there were so many versions of the Christian faith. She told herself that she would take time to investigate them all—for she had to figure out—how could there be so many different truths. She eventually came to discover answers to her questions while residing in the Washington, D.C. area for over thirty years, where a multitude of diverse religions and faiths exist. After mingling among so many different faiths, she concluded that if one decides to serve a deity or partake in religion, they should start by getting to know the Bible for their own enlightenment and not depend on someone else to tell them what it says. To learn more, please visit thebibleisbroken.com.

General Inquiries:            

LAVIDGE – Phoenix                        

Ashley Baccaro

480-648-7557

abaccaro@lavidge.com

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Colorblind Mississippi State University Students Gain Access to Specially Engineered EnChroma Glasses



“We are both deeply entrenched in teaching and value student success, so we couldn’t go forward with our teaching if any student has a solvable issue that hinders their ability to achieve their full potential,” said Amelia Fox, assistant clinical professor of plant and soil sciences.

Distinguishing red and green traffic lights. Determining the correct orientation of a drone from color cues and markings. Discerning color-coded topography lines on maps. These are just some ways colorblindness affects more than 350 million individuals globally, including an estimated 1,200 of the nearly 28,000 Mississippi State University students, faculty and staff who are Color Vision Deficient (CVD) across every discipline.

Mississippi State faculty members in the plant and soil sciences and geosciences departments have partnered with EnChroma, makers of specially engineered glasses that can alleviate CVD obstacles, to improve learning and support for colorblind students.

EnChroma, based in Berkeley, California, will provide the glasses—for indoor and outdoor use—for all colorblind MSU students and staff to borrow from the Department of Geosciences. Amelia Fox, assistant clinical professor of plant and soil sciences, arranged for the purchase of the glasses via EnChroma’s Color Accessibility Program.

Fox searched for assistance from various departmental faculty members. Ultimately, she found Renee Clary, a professor in geosciences, who had a mutual desire to address colorblindness in the classroom and a shared passion for optimizing learning for colorblind students.

“We are both deeply entrenched in teaching and value student success, so we couldn’t go forward with our teaching if any student has a solvable issue that hinders their ability to achieve their full potential,” Fox said. Together they gathered support to make EnChroma glasses for colorblindness available for loan to CVD students and staff on campus.

While the glasses do not restore one’s color vision to normal, they do enable red-green colorblind students in any discipline to see an expanded range of color more clearly and better discern color differences. Within the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, the glasses will help colorblind students orient drones properly and sense the correct flight sequences and wire aircraft to fly. Within the Department of Geosciences, the glasses will help students differentiate topography lines on maps, landscape coloration and volcanic rock colors.Both Fox and Clary have had prior experience with colorblind students and individuals throughout their lives. Clary said by closely working with a graduate student who was colorblind, she was able to see the benefits of the accommodating devices firsthand.

“When Dr. Fox reached out to me, I knew it was an important area we needed to address,” Clary said. “We need to accommodate our colorblind students so we can optimize their learning.” The EnChroma glasses support the two types of color blindness: protan and deutan. Protan colorblind individuals do not perceive enough red color, while deutan colorblindness is the result of not perceiving enough green. To see images depicting how color blind students and faculty at MSU see colorful scenes on campus and in schoolwork click here.

Fox said she is confident that the glasses will provide a better academic experience for colorblind students. “As teachers, we can fill in the gaps of our students through empathy and simple tools, such as these glasses,” Fox said. “A saying goes ‘if you only have a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.’ But you need many tools in your toolbox if you’re going to teach different students.”

For more information on the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, within the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, visit http://www.pss.msstate.edu.

For more on the Department of Geosciences, within the College of Arts and Sciences, visit http://www.geosciences.msstate.edu.

For more on EnChroma, the effects of color blindness, its glasses or the Color Accessibility Program, visit http://www.enchroma.com or email accessibility@enchroma.com.

MSU is Mississippi’s leading university, available online at http://www.msstate.edu.

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A Tale of Redemption and Hope in the Face of Darkness


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Spending time with family and friends, and traveling with my husband are among my favorite things to do

Author Karen E. Drennen invites readers on a journey of hope and redemption in Elkanah’s Promise ($17.99, paperback, 9781662862762; $8.99, e-book, 9781662862779).

After years of trauma and abuse, Annie found herself in a store dumpster, just waiting for death, which she was ready to welcome. However, she was discovered by a man – a man who was totally different from her abusive father. Could this man convince her that God loved, rather than hated her? Could she even learn to forgive the man who caused her years of pain?

“Spending time with family and friends, and traveling with my husband are among my favorite things to do,” said Drennen.

Karen E Drennen is a retired registered nurse with Master’s degrees in both Christian Ministry and Practical Theology. She has worked for many years as a chaplain and nursing instructor, and her hope is that others will discover (or re-discover) the mercy and love of God through her writings. Drennen lives with Ohio with her husband and black lab.

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Xulon Press, a division of Salem Media Group, is the world’s largest Christian self-publisher, with more than 15,000 titles published to date. Elkanah’s Promise is available online through xulonpress.com/bookstore, amazon.com, and barnesandnoble.com.

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empty tomb®, inc.’s Mission Match® Offers a Tool to Churches to Reverse Long-Standing Trends Found in New Edition of The State of Church Giving Series


One part of that is to declare a core and defining conviction: No child under age five should die anywhere in the world from a treatable cause.

Contents summary of this press release:

  • Church member giving as a percent of income and membership as a percent of population trends begun in the early 1960s continued downward through 2020, according to the newest edition in The State of Church Giving series.
  • empty tomb’s Mission Match is designed as a tool to help reduce, in Jesus’ name, the rate of under-age-five child deaths in 40 countries, while hoping to reverse the downward trends among church members. Congregations can apply for matching funds.

The 32nd edition in empty tomb’s The State of Church Giving series finds membership and giving trends continued through 2020, the first year of the COVID pandemic. However, these trends began long before 2020. Although various church theologians have reflected on the condition of the church in the U.S., a strong downturn has been evident in church support since the 1960s.

The new book, The State of Church Giving through 2020: A Theology for an Age of Affluence, is being released in April 2023.

In addition to documenting church giving and membership trends, empty tomb also offers congregations a tool to reverse those trends. Congregations can apply for matching money for their new and expanded mission projects.

Background:

As far back as 1942, Bernard Iddings Bell asked in The Atlantic, “Will the Christian Church Survive?” Bell, labeled on a cover of a 1944 TIME magazine, America’s “brilliant maverick,” had a degree from the University of Chicago, served as president of St. Stephens’ College (now Bard College) while he also served as head of Columbia University’s philosophy department, and lectured at Harvard, Oxford, Yale, Columbia, Chicago and Princeton, as well as many of the cathedrals in England.

In the 1942 article, Bell identified general trends in the church which became broadly visible in the 1960s, according to empty tomb research.

Among Bell’s comments in The Atlantic in 1942:

“… the Church was more and more regarded as a polite confraternity of occasional pious individuals, which had little or no social function except to lend a tone of respectability to a culture secularistic, man-centered, man-devised.”

“Without a complete rediscovery of its own function, the Church is hardly likely to matter any more tomorrow than it mattered yesterday, or than it matters at the moment, which is just about not at all.”

“… Christians have been too willing to come to terms with, and even to flatter, an essentially godless world.”

“The function of the Church is, with complete conviction of the divine inevitability of what Christ reveals about life, to resist all lesser, carnal interpretations of life — resist them in love but with firmness and consistency, convinced that thus it may persuade natural man, turn him to the right-about, save him from conceit and folly and cupidity and from the destruction these engender.”

“… the great mass of Christian people remain complacent, unaware both that the position of the Church in contemporary society is humiliating and that the cause of that humiliation is their own timid compromise with a secularism inconsistent with tenets the holding and advancement of which are the Church’s chief reason for being. It is their ineffective protest which has brought the Church into its present disrepute. For the world at large their failure has been little short of tragic. For years that world has been hearing and heeding the assured and strident cries of the hawkers of pottage, while the trumpets of God have sounded faith, obscure, confused.”

Bell wrote some two hundred years after the Industrial Revolution began to spread affluence in broader and broader circles throughout many societies.

On the other hand, in 1789, John Wesley, preached the following just a few decades after the revolutionary and far-reaching introduction of the steam engine, and two years before his death in 1791:

“Of the three rules which are laid down on this head, in the sermon on “The Mammon of Unrighteousness,” you may find many that observe the First rule, namely, “Gain all you can.” You may find a few that observe the Second, “Save all you can.” But how many have you found that observe the Third rule, “Give all you can”? Have you reason to believe, that five hundred of these are to be found among fifty thousand Methodists? And yet nothing can be more plain, than that all who observe the two first rules without the third, will be twofold more the children of hell than ever they were before.”

The mid-twentieth century was benefited by theologians trying to make sense of the world impacted by the change produced by common affluence. Reinhold Niebuhr, H. Richard Niebuhr, Karl Barth (“…take your Bible and take your newspaper, and read both. But interpret newspapers from your Bible”), Martin Buber, and Paul Tillich also worked to explain the interaction of the church with the changing world.

On a more individual level, Billy Graham continued the crusades model with remarkable effect in the new television era, recording many decisions for Christ, preaching his last crusade in 2005.

Yet the trends in the decline in giving as a percent of income to the church, and membership as a percent of U.S. population, that began in the early 1960s have continued almost uninterrupted through 2020.

What is to be done?

empty tomb’s Mission Match is working to develop a movement to counter the world’s selfie preoccupation through a counter-demonstration of love. Mission Match is based on the idea that the church ought to be promoting Jesus’ core values, including loving the neighbor as oneself. One part of that is to declare a core and defining conviction: No child under age five should die anywhere in the world from a treatable cause.

This year, over 1 million children will die because they lack access to simple treatments.

The church must declare, “This will not be, because Jesus loves the little children of the world.”

The church in the U.S. continues to have one of the best distribution networks in the world, but that structure is underutilized.

Christians have incomes that allow them, along with the rest of the U.S., to spend an average of $144.90 on chocolate (a total of $48 billion) a year. The 2021 $430.9 billion soft drink revenue in the U.S. works out to $1,297 per person. Meanwhile in 2020, the average gift to a church was $959 in 2020, the latest year available.

With an estimated $16 billion more a year needed to help, in Jesus’ name, make treatments available for little children, there’s no question that church people in the U.S. have the resources to make an impact on these child deaths.

empty tomb’s Mission Match is focused on 40 countries that were behind the goals for reducing the rates of child deaths as of 2015.

At this early stage, Mission Match is working to develop a model that can be expanded to impact these reduction rates.

Congregations can apply for matching contributions from $500 to $3,000, in $500 increments, for the new or expanded medical mission projects. Projects might include, for example, providing a portable ultrasound machine, helping to train midwives who will go into rural areas, or rebuilding a maternity clinic in a country ravaged by civil war.

The list of 40 countries is available at missionmatch.org on the 40 Countries page.

A church can find the application process at missionmatch.org on the Church Application page.

The first step to convince a world that it is wrong to disrespect the church is not to complain to the world. The first step is to act on Jesus’ agenda for loving a hurting world.

The State of Church Giving through 2020: A Theology for an Age of Affluence (32nd edition, April 2023) is scheduled to be available through Wipf and Stock Publishers.

NOTES:

Bernard Iddings Bell”; Wikipedia; n.d.; p. 1 of 2/8/2023 1:39 PM printout.

Bernard Iddings Bell; “Will the Christian Church Survive?”; The Atlantic; October 1942; pp. 3, 4, 13 of 2/5/2023 2:35 PM printout.

John Wesley; “Causes of the Inefficacy of Christianity”; Wesley’s Sermons – Sermon 116; p. 4 of 10/29/2019, 10:28 AM printout.

Barth in Retirement”; TIME; 5/31/1963; p. 1 of 4/18/2023 9:11 AM.

31 Current Chocolate Statistics (Market Data 2023)”; Dame Cacao; 2023; p. 2, 29 of 4/17/2023, 9:23 AM printout.

Chris Kolmar; “15+ U.S. Beverage Industry Statistics [2023]: Refreshing Trends, facts, and Stats”; Zippia; 3/6/2023; pp. 1, 2 of 4/17/2023 9:33 AM printout.

This Is It! Southern Kitchen & Bar-B-Q Celebrates 40 Years of Restaurant Industry Success in Atlanta


This It! The Miracle of BBQ logo

“The secret to our success is Jesus Christ,” states Anthony, who does not take his blessings lightly.

This Is It! Southern Kitchen & Bar-B-Q is celebrating 40 years of restaurant industry success in Atlanta. The milestone anniversary, sponsored by The People’s Station, V-103 (WVEE-FM), will kick off with the red-carpet premiere of the documentary, This Is It! The Miracle of BBQ on Sunday, June 11, 2023, at Atlanta’s Fabulous Fox Theatre at 6:00 PM.

A testament to God’s goodness, the documentary captures the life and faith walk of This Is It! BBQ’s founder and CEO Mr. Shelley “Butch” Anthony, III, who is the epitome of accomplishing great things through his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. The documentary features Atlanta’s Bruce Bruce, CeeLo, former WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder, and more.

Directed, written, and produced by award-winning Tammy Williams, the first Black woman to own a production studio in Georgia, it fuses the current success and expansion of the restaurant to over ten stores within the 40-year history of the family-owned enterprise.

The transparent documentary also explores the obstacles and struggles of entrepreneurship, revealing how Anthony defied the odds through his faith in God and overcame addiction struggles while having a limited education, ultimately creating a rich legacy.

This Is It! has been a staple in the Atlanta metro area for four decades. With its first restaurant being opened in East Point, This Is It! continues to set the standard for serving high-quality, award-winning food in a fast-casual dining setting. “The secret to our success is Jesus Christ,” states Anthony, who does not take his blessings lightly.

Focusing on timeless, down-home favorites, the theme “faith, family, favor, and flavor” is threaded throughout the establishment which has provided the basic foundation to scale its business — a testament to Anthony’s trust in God and embodies the personification of Psalm 34:8, “Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in him.”

The free, family-friendly event will feature live performances from award-winning and nationally recognized recording artists.

“It is our pleasure to invite the city of Atlanta to celebrate with us,” said Anthony. “From the beginning, we have planned to produce restaurants that would become part of the neighborhood. With the help of our loyal customers, we have realized that goal.”

An event designed to inspire, Anthony hopes that after viewing the documentary, attendees will walk away knowing they can accomplish great things through God’s grace when they have a personal relationship with Him through Christ.

For ticket information, please click here.

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About This Is It! Southern Kitchen & Bar-B-Q

Established in 1983, This Is It! Southern Kitchen & Bar-B-Q (more recently known as This Is It! Bar-B-Q & Seafood) specializes in authentic, southern, home-style cuisine and is nationally known for its famous award-winning barbeque rib tips. For 40 years, This Is It! has been recognized for exceptional hospitality and service paired with the best authentic freshly prepared barbeque and seafood. Headquartered in Fayetteville, Georgia, This Is It! has nine corporate stores, one open franchise, and one franchise that is being built. These locations are throughout the Metro Atlanta area, offering dine-in, to-go, delivery, private and corporate catering, and three full-scale event rental spaces. The company recently began operating as This Is It! Southern Kitchen & Bar-B-Q, a reflection of its expanded and more health-conscious menu items. Learn more about This Is It! BBQ, please click here.

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McShane Construction Company Completes Kirwan Apartments in Waukegan, Illinois, for Adults with Disabilities


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“We are very pleased to have completed construction at Kirwan Apartments,” shared Susan Uhlarik, Director of Multi-Family at McShane. “Twenty-four adults with physical disabilities are now able to live in a home that they can call their own while receiving support that helps them thrive.”

Construction is completed at Kirwan Apartments in Waukegan, Illinois. McShane Construction Company provided design-assist construction services for the development on behalf of their client, Over the Rainbow (OTR). The 24-unit affordable housing residence allows adults with physical disabilities to live independently. The development is named after Leo Kirwan, an OTR resident, board member, and advocate for accessible housing.

“We are very pleased to have completed construction at Kirwan Apartments,” shared Susan Uhlarik, Director of Multi-Family at McShane. “Twenty-four adults with physical disabilities are now able to live in a home that they can call their own while receiving support that helps them thrive.”

Positioned on a one-acre site adjacent to OTR’s Gustafson Apartments, the three-story wood frame building features a Hardie panel exterior. The building was designed to be compact to maximize landscape and minimize cost. Its clean and simple lines lend to a modernist design, while the exterior colors compliment the surrounding environment.

All units feature one bedroom and one bathroom and are barrier free. Tenant amenities in the building include a community room and laundry facilities.

The building was designed with sustainability in mind to achieve National Green Building Standard Bronze Certification and to meet requirements for ComEd’s Energy Efficiency Grant for affordable housing.

Weese Langley Weese Architects provided architectural services for Kirwan Apartments.

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